video / dvd
reaching beyond magical child
discovering the intelligence of play
mother infant bonding & the
intelligence of the heart

the origins of love and violence
babies know more than you think
athletics and the intelligence of play
biology of concious parenting
audio for adults
joseph chilton pearce
michael mendizza
david bohm
audio for children
where wishes still come true
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Direct contact, ideally with mother, her touch,
movement, voice, body and facial expressions,
her taste and smell act as nutrients that shape
a baby’s physical, emotional, sexual and cognitive brain systems. Discover why past and present brain research challenges many assumptions regarding bonding and early child care policies.


Part I summarizes Prescott’s 15-years of pioneering research at NIH on the biological roots of violence, mother-infant separation and the developing brain. Jim describes how early bonding, nurturing touch, movement and breastfeeding encode the developing brain for a lifetime of affectionate relationships. Rare and dramatic images, from the award winning documentary Rock-A-By Baby, link permanent abnormalities in the brain to mother-infant separation, abuse and early neglect. Adult depression, violence and substance abuse are in part caused by these early traumas to the brain. This research summary and The Intelligence of the Heart redefines "bonding" as a biological imperative.


Part II includes the original 30 minute version of Rock-A-By Baby premiered first at the 1970 White House Conference on Children. This rare documentary highlights the emotional-psychological devastation of the failure of physical affectional bonding in the maternal-infant relationship in animals and humans. Brain-behavioral abnormalities are vividly dramatized in rhesus monkeys
as a consequence of mother-infant separation.

Child Abuse, CTV Toronto (11 minutes), provides an overview of the Somatosensory Affectional Deprivation theory of peace and violence. Explicit medical photos of abused children, a five second clip of the rape scene from "Clock Work Orange" and some natural nudity in primitive tribal cultures are shown. The video provides dramatic documentation that brain cell abnormalities were present in  mother deprived monkeys. The violence of these animals could be transformed into peaceful, alert, socially interactive animals through paleocerebellar surgery but not neocerbellar surgery. This study was conducted to demonstrate the role of the cerebellum in regulating emotional-social behaviors and not to advocate cerebeller surgery for violent individuals.  This rare film footage is not available anywhere else. 
See http://www.violence.de/berman/artical.html

Happy Babies, (7 minutes) interview with Connie Chung, Dr. Prescott and Suzanne Arms describes specific parenting practices to assure maternal-infant bonding. The television news broadcast features mothers describing how breastfeeding provides unusual emotional bonding with their infants.

Neuropsychology of Affectional Bonding, (5 minutes) interview discussing the neuropsychology of sensory stimulation and deprivation upon brain- behavioral development and why touching, hugging and carrying one's infant/child on the body of the mother, father or caretaker (vestibular-cerebellar stimulation) are essential for normal brain development and function and, thus, normal emotional-social development of the infant/child.

 

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